Skip to main content

PLAN

1 PLAN.jpg

10 SOAPT

The 10 Step Open Accessibility Planning Tool

10SOAPT steps.jpg

Our custom planning tool has been developed by Open Book Futures to help small presses achieve accessibility across thetheir organisation. It consists of 10 steps organised into 4 sections A-D. For each step, we have developed guidance that is hosted here on our Copim Compass area that will help you understand it fully. Our guidance is organised into 5 areas: Plan, Check, Learn, Communicate and Evidence, and we link to the exact areas of each of those that are relevant to each of the 10 steps below.

You can also access 10 SOAPT formatted as a spreadsheet: 10 SOAPT [Google Sheets]

 

A

Preparation

1.Description
1 StrategicAccountability PlanningAppoint Modela person to co-ordinate accessibility, who could be a dedicated accessibility professional or someone who has a wider portfolio of work that includes accessibility too. However, it's also important to remember that some accessibility work will be completed by almost everyone at an organisation.
2 Training Plan technical digital accessibility training and Selfsupport Assessmentthe Toolidentified '10 Stepsstaff to Creatingdevelop Customskills.
3 AccessibilityIdentify Roadmaps'Objectives -Once relevant staff have been identified and trained, some organisational accessibility objectives can be devised through requirements gathering exercises. Any organisation should aim to meet legal minimum requirements, but it's possible to be exempt from that (this requires work to evidence), and you may decide to go beyond in some areas if it fits with your organisational values. Also, your readership might already have made accessibility requests you haven't been able to meet yet, or you could survey your end users to capture this 'reader voice' in terms of accessibility requirements. Finally, it's possible there are some community or discipline specific considerations to include as well.
 
B Analysis and Auditing 
4 Baseline Auditing Audit the current accessibility of all aspects of the organisation, including the frontlist and backlist book files, the website functionality and the backend submission platform. You could complete this yourself using self auditing, or employ an external auditor. You could also look at assessing current organisational knowledge, attitudes towards and motivations for engaging with accessibility work.
5 Available and Required Capacity and Budget Improving accessibility requires dedicated time and money, and a strategicfull planningconsideration model,of availablewhere inthis Copimcan Compassbe diverted to accessibility goals will help with planning. It is likely that you will have some idea of how long book production tasks take, and how much extra work accessibility improvements will add to downloadthat, but it could be that you will need to understand more about the relative simplicity or complexity of individual accessibility requirements (like ALT text, or checking colour contrast).
 
C Implementation 
6 Documentation Capturing the results of identifying objectives, auditing, and analysing resources might happen across a range of documentation that could include: an accessibility policy, roadmaps, strategic plans, updated author guidelines, or other documentation.
7 Plan Work We recommend that frontlist and backlist/remediation are considered separately, toand separate plans for the website including the backend submission process.
8 Public Statements Publish accessibility statements and roadmaps on the organisation's website, and include VPATs and public policies if that is decided on.
 
D Improvements and Benchmarking 
9 Improvements Incorporate planned accessibility improvements into workflows and complete the plan.
10 Benchmark Auditing Audit the accessibility and organisational knowledge at regular intervals within the plan accessibility tasks within small presses

Strategic Planning Model and Self Assessment Tool '10 Steps to Creatingshowcase Custom Accessibility Roadmaps' - DRAFT review formatimprovements.